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all drugs not in gaseous state need to use fluid routes of excretion ◦ fluid routes include -sweat, tears, saliva, mucous, urine, bile, human milk ◦ amount of drug excreted in each of these fluids is in direct proportion to amount of fluid excreted SO…….
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numerous functions – ◦ filters out metabolic products
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numerous functions – main function – maintain correct balance between water and salt in body fluids ◦ filters out metabolic products ◦ blood continuously flowing through kidneys factors that influence a substance not being resorbed not lipid soluble ionized dialysis –
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absorption, distribution and excretion do not occur independently
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brain blood first pass metabolism
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1. Body weight - smaller size concentration of drug based on body fluid 2. Sex differences 3. Age
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4. Interspecies differences rabbits – belladonna (deadly nightshade) 5. Intraspieces differences 6. Disease states 7. Nutrition 8. Biorhythm
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half-life - time takes for the blood concentration to fall to half its initial value after a single dose ½ life tells us critical information about how long the action of a drug will last
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How long would it take for a drug to reach 12.5% remaining in blood if its ½ life is 2 hours? How long would it take for a drug to reach 12.5% remaining in blood if its ½ life is 100 hours?
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Provides a good indication of the time necessary to reach steady state after a dosage regime has been initiated (6X)
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drug elimination = drug availability usually try and maintain steady state concentration in therapeutic window
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So if a drug had a 3 hour ½ life – how long would it take to reach steady state?
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Therapeutic drug monitoring - branch of clinical chemistry that specializes in the measurement of medication levels in blood. Its main focus is on drugs with a narrow therapeutic range,
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- need to reach threshold plasma concentration at the receptor site to initiate and maintain a pharmacological response. ◦ assume that plasma represents good indicator of local site TDM is actually indirect How is TDM determined?
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What happens if? ◦ Plasma levels are too high – ◦ Plasma levels are too low – Focus on levels rather than dose
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info on a range of doses of drug dose usually presented on horizontal axis (log concentration) size of effect or percentage affected usually on vertical axis
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the intensity or magnitude of the response in a single person the % of people who exhibit a characteristic effect at a given dosage
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potency - amount of drug required to elicit a response slope of the line tells you about how much difference in drug is needed for small effects relative to larger effect
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Efficacy - maximum effect obtainable - peak of the DRC indicates the maximum effect
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Variability and slope – individual differences in drug response
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Different DRC depending upon measure of interest
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ED 50 - The dose of a drug that produces the desired effect in 50% of the population LD 50 – TI = Therapeutic Index – measure of safety LD 50/ED 50
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hypothetical drug that can be used as a sedative – this is tested in mice – ** dose cannot guarantee 100% sleeping and no deaths
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Caution in interpreting DRC Often see a bell-shaped curve in response to drug
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antagonist - one drug diminishes the effect of another agonist – one drug is additive to the effect of another
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Pharmacodynamics ◦ drugs produce their effects by binding to and interacting with receptors What is a receptor? ◦ usually a protein on the surface or in the cell
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each NT binds to its own receptors ◦ there can be multiple receptor subtypes
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each NT binds to its own receptors ◦ there can be multiple receptor subtypes useful for understanding drugs that work on the specific neurotransmitters
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1. ionotropic postsynaptic receptors quick action and over quickly
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Ion channel - close Copyright © motifolio.com 7111232
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Ion channel - open Copyright © motifolio.com 7111231
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Copyright © motifolio.com Ligand-gated channels Neurotransmitter receptor Ca 2+ -activated K + channel Cyclic nucleotide gated channel Na + K+K+ Glu K+K+ Ca 2+ Na + K+K+ cAMP cGMP 7111158
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2. G-protein coupled receptors ◦ (metabotropic) ◦ 2 nd messenger systems ◦ more than 50 G protein coupled receptors have been identified ◦ control many cellular processes
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3. carrier proteins (transporter) ◦ presynaptic transporters – transport NT back into presyn ending 4. enzymes – ◦ what is an enzyme? ◦ breakdown NT -
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1. the drug binds to the same location that the endogenous NT occupies results in similar effects as NT – agonist 2. binds to a site near the binding site for the NT ◦ facilitates NT binding ◦ allosteric effect ◦ modulatory effects
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3. binding to a receptor site normally occupied by the NT but not activating receptor and blocking NT ◦ antagonist
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certain drugs may be more potent than the nt
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expected results – due to the principal actions of the drugs less expected – no drug is completely selective
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definition? types of tolerance ◦ metabolic tolerance – enzyme induction ◦ pharmacodynamic tolerance –
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chemical see-saw drugbrain response
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The brain wants to rebalance the activity
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definition? types of tolerance ◦ metabolic tolerance – enzyme induction ◦ pharmacodynamic tolerance – ◦ behavioral tolerance
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